Is the finance industry "innovative"?

Younger generations want to be able to make an impact by being "innovative" and thinking outside the box. Wall Street has experienced talent lost to Silicon Valley because talented grads today believe that tech offers them the chance to "think outside the box" and to "build things" of tangible values. Sure, finance plays an extremely important role in society/economy but do you really need a genius to plug in numbers into an excel spreadsheet? A lot of grads think that working in finance is like being part of an "assembly line", following orders and doing essentially same tasks over and over again. Is there opportunity for monkeys to be innovative in this sector? Is talent being thus wasted if someone who is smart and creative takes Wall Street over Silicon Valley? The nature of the industry now seems that it doesn't value individuals who "think outside the box" and provide creative advice. Is this going to change in the future?

 

For the most part I agree - private sector innovation is excellent, and people should be able to capitalize on it.

However, being myself I do think government has a perogative to persue innovation that may not be immediately useful for either private sector or short-term gains. Items that have a long-term social good (that companies may eventually capitalize on) but cant afford to go after themselves currently for a variety of reasons.

For this though, I fully support the new method by NASA where they allocate X dollars towards a "result" and let private companies (often more innovative and riskier) do whatever it takes as long as they hit the result while meeting all the requirements. To me that is the ideal role of government when they have to undertake innovation for social good - incentives for private companies.

 

Interesting. I haven't read it yet, but I'd readily side with those who believe "innovation" is much too generous of a word. Financial Innovation has been formed only to circumvent regulation and aid in the creation of opportunities for speculation. Sure- there are secondary channels where wealth from financial innovation has trickeled down to other industries that fostered economic growth- but I don't think that counts.

 

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